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Warm up your Olympic watching with a bowl of hot borscht

Olympic officials estimate that 70,000 gallons of borscht will be served in Sochi during the Winter Games. Here's a vegetable-based, warm version of the popular Slavic dish.

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Kitchen Report
Top this meatless version of borscht with a dollop of sour cream and chopped, fresh parsley.

Amid the medal count predictions, fears of terrorist attacks, and complaints of no hot water from the media hotels, you may have missed this fact from Sochi: Olympic officials estimate that (beet soup) will be served during the 2014 Winter Games.

The Monitor鈥檚 reporter at the Games, Mark Sappenfield, asked me via Twitter if I was planning to do a Russia-inspired food blog post. (Go follow Mark, @sappenfieldm, you鈥檒l get his honest impressions from Sochi as he reports on his seventh Olympics and encounters things like a $100 laundry fee for a load that would fill half a basket.)

To be honest, my awareness of Russian food includes borscht and the unusual candy you can buy in Brookline, Mass., a Boston neighborhood populated by Russian immigrants. I had associated borscht with the vinegary, cold soups of summer. But I was pleased to discover that it can also be served cold or hot, with meat or without.

While it's enjoyed by many Slavic countries, Russia included, this simple soup made from stock, beets, potato, cabbage, and a variety of other vegetables, is considered the national dish of Ukraine. (Listen to a great interview about the history of the soup here, on NPR鈥檚 .)

I settled on a hot, vegetable version of borscht. If you swear you don鈥檛 like beets you should really reconsider, especially if you were raised with soggy canned beets. Fresh beets are delicious and sweet, and the potato in this soup gives it a really nice consistency and undertone. (Your teeth will not turn red, promise.)

Don鈥檛 toss out those beet greens! Simply chop them up, saut茅 with a little olive oil and garlic, and then season with a squeeze of fresh lemon,听 salt, and pepper. Serve as a side with your next meal.

This version of borscht comes out very red 鈥 shockingly red. If you are going for a color-themed dinner for Valentine鈥檚 Day later this week, start with a bowl of beet-red borscht.

Beet and cabbage borscht
听贵谤辞尘

Serves 4 to 6

3 tablespoons olive oil

3/4 pound russet potatoes, peeled and chopped (about 1 large potato)

2-1/2 cups chopped green cabbage

1 large onion, chopped

8 cups vegetable broth

6 2-inch diameter beets, peeled and chopped (beet juice will stain everything!)

1 cup chopped tomatoes (drain, if using canned tomatoes)

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

Salt and pepper, to taste

To garnish:

Sour cream

Fresh parsley, chopped

1. Heat oil in a dutch oven or heavy, large pot over medium high heat.

2. Add potatoes, cabbage and onion, and saut茅 until cabbage softens, about 5 minutes.

3. Add broth, beets, and tomatoes. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for 30 minutes, or until vegetables are tender.

4. With an immersion blender, blend until most of the vegetable chunks have been pureed. Or, working in small batches puree 4 cups of the soup in a blender, and then return to the pot.

5. Add lemon juice, season with salt and pepper.

6. Serve into bowls, garnish with a dollop of sour cream and chopped parsley.

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